“Britain
spends some 7% of GDP on security in the round. Elements of this broad security
spend that the Government has shifted into the defence budget to give the
appearance of maintaining the defence budget at 2% GDP. It has done this by
exploiting to the full the NATO definition of ‘other’ expenditure in support of
deployable forces. This has been done primarily by shifting intelligence assets
and resources not directly supporting the force to within the defence budget.
Therefore, the ‘increase’ in the
defence budget announced in the July [2014] Statement is unlikely to lead to
enhanced fighting power, which was the political inference in maintaining 2%
GDP expenditure on defence”.
Professor Julian Lindley-French,
evidence to the House of Commons Defence Committee, November 2015
Alphen, Netherlands. 3 January. Britain must play offence with security
and defence in 2017. Why? 2017 will be one of those inflection moments in
geopolitics and Britain needs to influence it. Brexit, Trump, Russia, IS, and and
a host of wider challenges to the fast collapsing Western world order 1.0
demands proportionate action by one of the world’s top five world economic and
security powers. Consequently, invisible security power and visible military
power must be at the core of Britain’s 2017 influence campaign in at least two
vital strategic arenas; Brexit and the forging of a new hard-nosed strategic relationship
with the incoming Trump administration.
Brexit: In my November 2016 remarks to the
annual alumni meeting of University College, Oxford I said Brexit will not be
resolved by the pettifogging process and legalism beloved of Brussels, small
European powers, and Whitehall. Britain’s new relationship with the EU will be
forged over power fundamentals such as wealth, security and defence. Unfortunately,
the process-junkies of the London elite establishment simply do not get this.
That once great newspaper The Economist,
which today too often confuses ‘analysis’ with one-eyed efforts to thwart
Brexit, mistakenly suggested in its Christmas edition that the EU may withhold
security and intelligence co-operation if Theresa May seeks a hardish Brexit.
Wrong. Britain’s security and intelligence services are by far the best in
Europe, particularly in the fight against IS. Take the Dutch for example. Whatever Britain’s future relationship with
the EU the Netherlands would never countenance seeing co-operation end between
its MIVD and Britain’s Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) because of some
parochial, vindictive directive from Brussels. Much the same can be said for
the rest of Europe, including France and Germany.
Trump: Hard-headed businessman that he is President-elect Trump
has already indicated he will judge America’s European allies on the extent to
which they are willing to invest in their own defence, and their concomitant commitment
to support America’s global security role. Trump’s litmus test will likely be
the willingness of allies to meet the NATO defence investment pledge of 2% GDP
on defence, of which 20% must be investment on new military equipment.
The problem: The strategic situation has worsened
markedly since the disastrous 2010 Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR
2010) and yet London sticks doggedly to too many of its already outdated
prescriptions. Britain will blow both opportunities to influence Brexit and
Trump if London continues to play defence pretence. London routinely trots out
the mantra that Britain is one of only five NATO members that spend 2% of GDP
on defence, and that London is investing some £178bn on new equipment. This is
simply political rhetoric. As former Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir
Nick Houghton suggested in December 2015 the reality is that Britain’s armed forces are too
small, hollowed-out, over-stretched, under-resourced, and increasingly stressed, with little or no relationship between roles, missions, capability and capacity.
The force challenge: Take the British Army. At 82,500 the
Regular Army is too small, efforts to offset cuts to the force via the creation
of a 30,000 strong part-time Reserve Army have failed, and much of the
non-commissioned officer backbone of the force taken voluntary
redundancy in disgust. Moreover, the insistence on cost-neutral investments (?)
is forcing the Army to make bad choices, such as the December 2016 decision to scrap more main battle tanks simply to fund lighter armoured vehicles just at the
moment the Russians are deploying significant numbers of the new T-14 Armata tank to NATO’s eastern border. Much the same can be said for the Royal Air
Force. However, it is the Royal Navy
which reveals the extent of that lack of balance in Britain’s unbalanced
defence policy. This year it is likely the first of Britain’s two new
super-carriers HMS Queen Elizabeth
will be commissioned. I say ‘likely’ because my sources in the Trump camp tell
me President Trump could well cancel the vertical take-off version of the F-35
to teach US defence contractors a lesson about excessive cost and poor
performance. The problem is that the F-35B is the very aircraft for which the
British carriers are designed and why the two ships are so big. Should the
F-35B indeed be cancelled the two ships will either have to be re-designed
(again) to handle conventional carrier aircraft, turned into gigantic
helicopter carriers, or simply mothballed. The strategic and political impact of
any of the above would be disastrous for London precisely because the two
carriers are meant to be national strategic assets and statements of power.
The cause: Beyond including the cost of
intelligence and ‘other’ items in the defence budget for the first time in its
history Britain’s sea-based future nuclear deterrent is now funded from the defence
budget. At the current level of defence
investment Britain can afford either a powerful conventional force, or a
credible nuclear deterrent, but not both. The result is that the credibility of both
Britain’s conventional and nuclear forces is declining and in turn undermining
Britain’s strategic influence at a critical juncture.
The consequence: No real increase will take place in
force investment until at least 2019. Consequently, the Royal Navy will lack the
personnel to properly man the two carriers because SDSR 2015 forced the Senior Service to make
an absurd choice between capability and capacity at the operational expense of
both. There is now profound uncertainty about when the under-hulled Navy will
actually get the new frigates on order. Moreover,
its state-of-the-art Type 45
destroyers are effectively laid up due to a design flaw in propulsion and power
systems. There is also much concern about the ability of a future deployed
British maritime force to defend itself in the face of emerging anti-ship
technologies.
The paradox?
The danger exists that the two great carriers, far from projecting power
and influence, will instead become icons of strategic failure and incompetence.
Certainly, those that need to know in Washington, Berlin, Paris, Moscow,
Beijing, Brussels and elsewhere, understand this. This is the reason why
Britain punches so far beneath its weight these days in international affairs.
The solution: If Britain is to properly use its armed
forces as a lever of strategic influence (as it should) it must do so by
creating a force that can not only play a full and proper role in the contemporary
and future defence of the Alliance (and not just the defence of Britain), but
also help relieve the pressure on over-stretched US forces, and demonstrate the
indispensability of Britain as a security and defence ally to Americans and
Europeans alike. In other words, London must urgently rebalance Britain’s unbalanced
defence policy so that investment in military assets is matched by investment
in the numbers and quality of personnel needed to exploit those assets,
together with the supporting structures needed to sustain the force across the
entirety of its roles and missions.
The proposal: The British government very publicly
announces an addendum to SDSR 2015 (it has been done before) in which it states
that 2% of GDP will be invested in the future force, and that the cost of the
new Successor nuclear deterrent programme will again be met from the national
contingency budget. London should also announce that much of the funding
diverted in 2015 away from defence will be reinvested in defence. Much of the rest
of the shortfall, the Government should state, will be met from the gesture-laden,
appallingly wasteful aid and development budget, too much of which has been
revealed of late to be hopelessly out-of-control, and in terms of the British
national interest by and large useless.
The conclusion: Will London have the strategic vision
and the political courage to do this? Probably not. The price? A loss of critical influence at the very
moment when Britain needs not just to appear strong, but to be strong in the
coming Brexit negotiations and the forging of new power relationships.
The bottom-line: IF London in 2017 is to influence the
power fundamentals of its respective relationships with Europeans and Trump
Britain must play offence with defence. To that end, London must stop being in
thrall to accountants and penny-pinchers, and start re-capitalising all of its
influence assets. That means more strategists in charge who properly understand
power and its application.
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